Awesome Vertical Garden With Recycled PET Bottles at Poor Family Home in Sao Paulo
Here's a post from one of my favorite sites, Treehugger!
Brazilian design studio Rosenbaum collaborates with TV show Caldeirao do Huck in a segment called Lar doce lar (Home Sweet Home), which helps families in need re-designing their homes to improve their lives and self-esteem.
In its latest work for a family living in the outskirts of Sao Paulo, the firm included this neat vertical garden made from recycled PET bottles.

Although the idea is cool in itself, it's so much better knowing that it's part of a project to improve the lives of three women (mother and two daughters) that live in a one bedroom home with an income of 200 Reais (130 US dollars) a month.
Putting together an urban farm was not the designer's whim either: the women already had an eco-conscience and grew in small containers made from recovered food packaging.

The arrangement is of course thought for vegetables that don't take a lot of space to grow, like spices and medicinal herbs. Continue reading to learn about this vertical garden!

In the tiny home, smart storage is a must. Hiding life's necessities behind sleek cabinetry often makes a space appear larger — and makes living organized and clutter free.


Here on TreeHugger we've already seen minimalist 
Besides fast foot chains, AFH is the largest youth employer in Boston, where they are based. They provide employment to more than two hundred inner-city teenagers per year, many of whom are under-served, in commission projects including painting, video, animation, sculpture, 3D design, graphic design and screen printing. The youth work with mentors and develop entrepreneurial skills. And they work out of a Platinum LEED-Certified building, called the Epicenter, which was designed in part by former participants of their programs.